Editorial Op-ed 
 Saluting CUNY’s ‘guardian angels’ 
 BY FELIX MATOS RODRIGUEZ 
 Elvira Mata was born with a physical  
 disability that causes swelling and  
 pain in the joints of her fi ngers. The  
 second-year student at Hostos Community  
 College works as a senior nurse attendant,  
 and for months cared  
 for patients with COVID 
 19  in  a  Bronx  
 hospital.  Despite  her  
 condition,  she  was  
 able  to  lift and bathe  
 her patients.  
 “Before I go to work,  
 I have pain,” says Elvira, 
  who was diagnosed  
 as a young child with  
 boutonnière deformity.  
 “But  when  I  see  that  
 the patients need me, I  
 can move more freely. I  
 love seeing their smiles  
 when I help them and  
 they feel better.”  
 Elvira is also dealing with tremendous  
 personal heartache after her father, a taxi  
 driver, died of COVID-19 in April. Her  
 mother was also infected and endured a  
 lengthy period of recovery.  
 I am proud to say that Elvira exemplifi es  
 a standard of public service not uncommon  
 among students at the City University of  
 New York, an intense drive to help New  
 Yorkers persevere despite their own challenges  
 CUNY Chancellor Felix Matos  
 Rodríguez 
 and personal losses. They are nurses  
 and medics, National Guard members and  
 good  Samaritans  who  helped  shoulder  
 the pain of the pandemic while they balanced  
 demanding course loads and caring  
 for their own families.  
 They  are  why  New  York’s  recovery  
 goes  hand  in  hand  with  CUNY. With  
 campuses  throughout  the  city  that was  
 the  pandemic’s  one-time  global  epicenter, 
   the  nation’s  largest  urban  public  
 university has the intellect and applied expertise  
 to help chart a course forward; the  
 capacity  to  retrain  workers,  and  equip  
 them with  the  skills  to  participate  in  a  
 re-invented  job  market;  and  the  wellspring  
 of creative capital to help our city  
 and state move forward in the months and  
 years ahead.  
 When it comes to our students, Elvira  
 is not alone. Many others stepped up and  
 did what  they  could  to help New Yorkers  
 weather the crisis. Here are just a few  
 examples.  
 Anthony Almojera, a Brooklyn College  
 senior who is also an Emergency Medical  
 Services lieutenant paramedic in the  
 FDNY  and  vice  president  of  the  EMS  
 offi cers’ union, has always leaned on family  
 and faith to get him through diffi cult times.  
 Almojera took off the spring semester to  
 have surgery on a torn biceps tendon, an  
 injury he sustained during a call. When the  
 pandemic surged in March, he put off the  
 surgery to pitch in, working 16-hour shifts  
 nearly seven days a week  
 and fi elding some of the  
 more than 7,000 calls that  
 came in each day requesting  
 emergency  medical  
 service in the city.        
 Shawna  Townsend  is  
 pursuing  her  Ph.D.  in  
 nursing at The Graduate  
 Center while also serving  
 as a clinical nurse leader  
 at the Hospital for Special  
 Surgery  in  Manhattan.  
 When  the  pandemic  
 deepened,  she  helped  
 convert  a  hospital  that  
 specializes in orthopedic  
 surgery to one that could  
 treat patients with COVID-19.  
 In the darkest days when up to four of  
 the hospital’s fl oors were fi lled with coronavirus  
 patients, she would fi nd inspiration  
 from the patients who recovered and were  
 showered with applause from the staffers  
 as they left the facility.    
 Borough of Manhattan Community College  
 student Fenellah Kargbo is a member  
 of the New York Army National Guard. She  
 managed to keep up with her coursework  
 in four classes even after she was activated  
 in March, midway through the semester,  
 to load personal protective equipment at a  
 distribution center in Albany.  
 For  encouragement  while  separated  
 from her family, Kargbo, who plans to apply  
 to the BMCC nursing program, relied  
 on frequent video chats with her husband  
 and 14-month-old son.    
 As their Chancellor, I am humbled by the  
 bravery and sacrifi ce of Elvira, Anthony,  
 Shawna, and Fenellah, all CUNY heroes.  
 They are exemplary ambassadors of the  
 University, embodying the University’s mission  
 to help one another so we all can move  
 forward together. They, and many more like  
 them, are the University’s guardian angels,  
 and on behalf of the whole CUNY system,  
 I  extend  the  gratitude  of  the University  
 community and all New Yorkers.  
 Félix V. Matos Rodríguez is the chancellor  
 of the City University of New York, the  
 nation’s largest urban public university,  
 serving over 500,000 students of all ages  
 in seven community colleges, 11 senior colleges  
 and seven graduate or professional  
 institutions. Visit cuny.edu. 
 Blame game makes the city less safe 
 Bail reform. 
 Closed courts. 
 Early releases from Rikers Island.  
 Economic  suffering  during  the  COVID 
 19 pandemic.  
 A lack of public support for the cops. 
 These were just some of the excuses that  
 Mayor Bill de Blasio and NYPD leaders offered  
 in responding to the outburst of gun  
 violence over the Fourth of July weekend that  
 killed nine and injured dozens of people. They  
 also used these same excuses to explain a disturbing  
 spike in crime across the city in June. 
 There are grains of truth in many of the  
 excuses.  
 Bail  reform,  court  closures  and  early  
 releases  during  the  pandemic  certainly  
 resulted in some (not all) offenders being  
 inadvertently  sprung  from  jail,  only  to  
 commit more crime. There’s always going  
 to be that handful of individuals who take  
 advantage of any system, designed to right  
 a wrong, to then commit a wrong. 
 The pandemic rocked the city’s economy  
 harder  than  it’s  been  since  the  Great  
 Depression.  Joblessness,  homelessness  
 and hunger have affl icted our entire city.  
 Naturally, there are going to be some (not  
 all) who become desperate to the point of  
 committing crime. 
 And yes, there have been too many instances  
 of protesters berating and taunting  
 cops, and treating them with disrespect.  
 Such displays are unfair and hurtful, and  
 get in the way of progress. Police offi cials  
 have said that behavior has lowered morale  
 in the department. 
 Morale, however, cannot get in the way  
 of  the  mission  to  protect  and  serve  all  
 people of New York — an obligation that  
 each offi cer swore to fulfi ll on their fi rst  
 day. 
 The blame game for the surge in violence  
 can go on forever — but in the long run,  
 what will it do? Nothing, except embolden  
 the fear-mongers looking to stop progress  
 at every turn. 
 We repeat: City Hall, the NYPD and activists  
 seeking criminal justice reform must start  
 talking to each other. They must work with  
 each other to reduce crime, improve society  
 and reform how the NYPD does its job.  
 No one side can declare moral superiority  
 over the other in this objective.  
 All of us should want a city of peace  
 where  crime  and  poverty  are  low, with  
 liberty, prosperity and justice for all. But  
 the only way we get to that is by working  
 together rather than pointing fi ngers and  
 scaring each other. 
 Publisher of The Villager, Villager Express, Chelsea Now, 
 Downtown Express and Manhattan Express 
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